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NAME

       nx::Object - API reference of the base class in the NX object system

SYNOPSIS

       nx::Object  create  obj  ?-object-mixins mixinSpec? ?-class newClassName? ?-object-filters
       filterSpec? ?initBlock?

       nx::Object  new  ?-object-mixins   mixinSpec?   ?-class   newClassName?   ?-object-filters
       filterSpec? ?initBlock?

       obj  ?public  |  private  |  protected?  object  alias  ?-debug?  ?-deprecated? methodName
       ?-returns valueChecker? ?-frame object | method? cmdName

       obj cget configurationOption

       obj configure ?configurationOption value ...?

       obj contains ?-withnew trueFalse? ?-object objectName? ?-class className? cmds

       obj copy ?newObjectName?

       obj delete object feature arg

       obj destroy

       obj eval arg ?arg ...?

       obj object filters submethod ?arg ...?

       obj ?public | protected  |  private?  object  forward  ?-debug?  ?-deprecated?  methodName
       ?-prefix prefixName? ?-frame object? ?-returns valueChecker? ?-verbose? ?target? ?arg ...?

       obj info baseclass

       obj info children ?-type className? ?pattern?

       obj info class

       obj info has ?mixin | namespace | type? ?arg ...?

       obj info lookup submethod ?arg ...?

       obj info name

       obj info info ?-asList?

       obj info object filters ?-guards? ?pattern?

       obj info object method option methodName

       obj info object methods ?-callprotection level? ?-type methodType? ?-path? ?namePattern?

       obj info object mixins ?-guards? ?pattern?

       obj info object slots ?-type className? ?pattern?

       obj info object variables ?pattern?

       obj info parent

       obj info precedence ?-intrinsic? ?pattern?

       obj info variable option handle

       obj info vars ?pattern?

       obj  ?public  |  protected | private? object method ?-debug? ?-deprecated? name parameters
       ?-checkalways? ?-returns valueChecker? body

       obj move newObjectName

       obj object mixins submethod ?arg ...?

       obj  object  property  ?-accessor  public  |  protected  |  private?  ?-class   className?
       ?-configurable  trueFalse?  ?-incremental? ?-nocomplain? ?-trace set | get | default? spec
       ?initBlock?

       obj require namespace

       obj require ?public | protected | private? object method methodName

       obj unknown unknownMethodName ?arg ...?

       obj object variable ?-accessor  public  |  protected  |  private?  ?-incremental?  ?-class
       className?  ?-configurable  trueFalse?  ?-initblock  script?  ?-trace set | get | default?
       ?-nocomplain? spec ?defaultValue?

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       nx::Object is the base class of the NX object  system.  All  objects  defined  in  NX  are
       (direct  or indirect) instances of this base class. The methods provided by the nx::Object
       base class are available to all objects and to all classes defined in NX.

               +---------+
               | ::nx::* |
               +---------+--------------------------------------Y
               |                                                |
               |  +---------+     instance of     +----------+  |
               |  |         |<....................|          |  |
               |  |  Class  |                     |  Object  |  |
               |  |         |....................>|          |  |
               |  +----+----+     subclass of     +-----+----+  |
               |       ^                           ^    ^       |
              instance.|...........................|....|......./
                    of |                           |    |
                 +-----+-----+    subclass of      |    | instance
                 |           |.....................|    | of
                 |   /cls/   |    (by default)          |
                 |           |                          |
                 +-----------+                          |
                       ^                                |
              instance |.............(xor)..............|
                    of |         +-----------+          |
                       |.........|           |..........|
                                 |   /obj/   |
                                 |           |
                                 +-----------+

       NX allows for creating and for using objects (e.g. obj) which are  instantiated  from  the
       base  class  nx::Object  directly.  Typical use cases are singletons and anonymous, inline
       objects. In such use cases, NX does not require creating an intermediate application class
       (e.g. cls), which specializes the base class nx::Object by default, beforehand.

       Objects  (e.g.  obj)  which are creating by instantiating a previously defined application
       class (e.g. cls) are indirect instances of nx::Object.

       Direct instances of nx::Object can be created as follows:

       nx::Object create obj ?-object-mixins mixinSpec?  ?-class  newClassName?  ?-object-filters
       filterSpec? ?initBlock?

              To  create  a direct instance of nx::Object having an explicit name obj, use create
              on nx::Object. Note that create  is  defined  by  nx::Class  and  is  available  to
              nx::Object  being  an  instance  of  nx::Class.  This way, singleton objects can be
              created, for example.

       nx::Object  new  ?-object-mixins   mixinSpec?   ?-class   newClassName?   ?-object-filters
       filterSpec? ?initBlock?
              To create a direct instance of nx::Object having an automatically assigned, implict
              object name, use new on nx::Object. Note that new is defined by  nx::Class  and  is
              available  to  nx::Object  being  an  instance  of  nx::Class. Using new allows for
              creating anonymous, inline objects, for example.

       The configuration options for direct and indirect instances of nx::Object,  which  can  be
       passed when calling create and new, are documented in the subsequent section.

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS FOR INSTANCES OF NX::OBJECT

       Configuration options can be used for configuring objects during their creation by passing
       the options as non-positional arguments into calls of new and create (see  nx::Class).  An
       existing  object can be queried for its current configuration using cget and it can be re-
       configured using configure. Legal configuration options are:

       -class ?className?
              Retrieves the current class of the object or sets the object's class to  className,
              if provided.

       -object-filters ?filterMethods?
              Retrieves  the list of currently active per-object filter methods or sets a list of
              per-object filter methods, if filterMethods is provided.

       -object-mixins ?mixinSpecs?
              If mixinSpecs is not specified, retrieves the list of currently  active  per-object
              mixin  specifications.  If mixinSpecs is specified, sets a list of per-object mixin
              specifications to become active. mixin classes are returned or set in  terms  of  a
              list of mixin specifications.

METHODS FOR INSTANCES OF NX::OBJECT

       alias

              obj  ?public  | private | protected? object alias ?-debug? ?-deprecated? methodName
              ?-returns valueChecker? ?-frame object | method? cmdName
                     Define an alias method for the given object. The resulting method  registers
                     a  pre-existing  Tcl  command cmdName under the (alias) name methodName with
                     the object. If cmdName refers to another method, the corresponding  argument
                     should  be  a  valid  method  handle.  If  a Tcl command (e.g., a proc), the
                     argument should be a  fully  qualified  Tcl  command  name.  If  aliasing  a
                     subcommand  (e.g.,  array exists) of a Tcl namespace ensemble (e.g., array),
                     cmdName must hold the fully qualified subcommand name (and not the  ensemble
                     name of the subcommand).

                     As  for a regular object method, -returns allows for setting a value checker
                     on the values returned by the aliased command cmdName.

                     When creating an alias method for a C-implemented Tcl command (i.e., command
                     defined  using  the  Tcl/NX  C-API),  -frame  sets  the  scope  for variable
                     references used in the aliased command. If the  provided  value  is  object,
                     then  variable  references  will  be  resolved  in the context of the called
                     object, i.e., the object upon which the alias method is invoked, as if  they
                     were  object variables. There is no need for using the colon-prefix notation
                     for identifying object variables. If the value is method, then  the  aliased
                     command  will  be executed as a regular method call. The command is aware of
                     its called-object context; i.e., it can resolve ::nx::self. In addition, the
                     alias  method  has  access  to  the method-call context (e.g., nx::next). If
                     -frame is omitted, and by default, the variable references will  resolve  in
                     the context of the caller of the alias method.

                     To  express  deprecation of the alias method methodName, set the -deprecated
                     flag. Deprecated methods remain usable from client  code,  but  their  usage
                     will   be   signaled   to   the   developer  and/or  can  be  tracked  using
                     ::nsf::deprecated. To register methodName with the debugger, set the  -debug
                     flag.   Entering  and  exiting a method, which was flagged for debugging, is
                     recorded by calling the redefinable callback  procs  ::nsf::debug::call  and
                     ::nsf::debug::exit,  respectively.  By  default,  these callbacks forward to
                     ::nsf::log, which can also be customized at the script level.

       cget

              obj cget configurationOption
                     The method is used to obtain the current value  of  configurationOption  for
                     obj.  The  configuration  options  available  for  querying through cget are
                     determined by the configurable properties defined by the class hierarchy  of
                     obj.  The queriable configuration options for obj can be obtained by calling
                     info lookup  syntax  configure.  The  configurationOption  can  be  set  and
                     modified using configure.

                     % nx::Object create obj
                     ::obj
                     % ::obj info lookup syntax configure
                     ?-object-mixins /mixinreg .../? ?-class /class/? ?-object-filters /filterreg .../? ?/__initblock/?
                     % ::obj cget -class
                     ::nx::Object

       configure

              obj configure ?configurationOption value ...?
                     This  method  sets  configuration  options  on  an object. The configuration
                     options available for setting on obj  are  determined  by  the  configurable
                     properties defined by the class hierarchy of obj. The settable configuration
                     options for obj can be obtained by calling  info  lookup  syntax  configure.
                     Furthermore,  configure  is  also  called  during object construction. Under
                     object construction, it receives the arguments passed into calls  of  create
                     and new. Options set using configure can be retrieved using cget.

                     % nx::Class create Foo {:property x}
                     ::Foo
                     % Foo create f1 -x 101
                     ::f1
                     % f1 cget -x
                     101
                     % f1 configure -x 200
                     % f1 cget -x
                     200

       contains

              obj contains ?-withnew trueFalse? ?-object objectName? ?-class className? cmds
                     This method acts as a builder for nested object structures. Object and class
                     construction statements passed to this method as its last argument cmds  are
                     evaluated in a way so that the receiver object obj becomes the parent of the
                     newly  constructed  objects  and  classes.  This  is  realized  by   setting
                     explicitly  the  namespace  for constructing relatively named objects. Fully
                     qualified object names in cmds evade the nesting.

                     -withnew requests the automatic rescoping of objects created  using  new  so
                     that  they  become  nested  into  the receiver object obj, rather than being
                     created in the default namespace for autonamed  objects  (i.e.,  ::nsf).  If
                     turned off, autonamed objects do not become children of obj.

                     The  parent  object  objectName  to  be used instead of obj can be specified
                     using -object. If this explicitly set parent object does not exist prior  to
                     calling  contains,  it  will  be  created on the fly as a direct instance of
                     nx::Object. Alternatively,  using  -class,  a  class  className  other  than
                     nx::Object for the on-the-fly creation of objectName can be provided.

                     % nx::Class create Window {
                       :contains {
                         #
                         # Become children of Window, implicitly
                         #
                         nx::Class create Header; # Window::Header
                         nx::Object create Panel; # Window::Panel
                       }
                       #
                       # Explicitly declared a child of Window using [self]
                       #
                       nx::Class create [self]::Slider; # Window::Slider
                       #
                       # Fully-qualified objects do not become nested
                       #
                       nx::Class create ::Door; # ::Door
                     }
                     ::Window
                     % ::Window info children
                     ::Window::Panel ::Window::Header ::Window::Slider

       copy

              obj copy ?newObjectName?
                     Creates  a  full  and  deep  copy  of a source object obj. The object's copy
                     features all structural and behavioral  properties  of  the  source  object,
                     including   object  variables,  per-object  methods,  nested  objects,  slot
                     objects, namespaces, filters, mixins, and traces.  The  copy  can  be  named
                     explicitly,  if  newObjectName is provided, or it is named automatically (in
                     the spirit of new of nx::Class).

       delete

              obj delete object feature arg
                     This method serves as the equivalent to Tcl's rename for removing structural
                     (properties, variables) and behavioral features (methods) of the object:

              obj delete object property propertyName

              obj delete object variable variableName

              obj delete object method methodName
                     Removes   a   property   propertyName,  variable  variableName,  and  method
                     methodName, respectively, previously defined for the scope of the object.

                     delete object method can be equally used for removing regular  methods  (see
                     object  method),  an alias method (see object alias), and a forwarder method
                     (see object forward).

       destroy

              obj destroy
                     This method allows for explicitly destructing  an  object  obj,  potentially
                     prior  to obj being destroyed by the object system (e.g. during the shutdown
                     of the object system upon calling exit):

                     [nx::Object new] destroy

                     By providing a custom implementation of destroy, the  destruction  procedure
                     of   obj   can  be  customized.  Typically,  once  the  application-specific
                     destruction logic has completed, a custom destroy will trigger  the  actual,
                     physical object destruction via next.

                     % [nx::Object create obj {
                       :public method destroy {} {
                         puts "destroying [self]"
                         next; # physical destruction
                       }
                     }] destroy
                     destroying ::obj

                     A  customized  object-desctruction  scheme  can  be  made shared between the
                     instances of a class, by defining the  custom  destroy  for  an  application
                     class:

                     % nx::Class create Foo {
                         :method destroy {} {
                           puts "destroying [self]"
                           next; # physical destruction
                         }
                     }
                     ::Foo
                     % Foo create f1
                     ::f1
                     % f1 destroy
                     destroying ::f1

                     Physical  destruction  is performed by clearing the in-memory object storage
                     of obj. This is achieved by passing obj into a call to dealloc  provided  by
                     nx::Class. A near, scripted equivalent to the C-implemented destroy provided
                     by nx::Object would look as follows:

                     % Object method destroy {} {
                       [:info class] dealloc [self]
                     }

                     Note,  however,  that  destroy  is   protected   against   application-level
                     redefinition. Trying to evaluate the above script snippet yields:

                     refuse to overwrite protected method 'destroy'; derive e.g. a sub-class!

                     A  custom  destroy  must  be  provided  as  a  refinement  in  a subclass of
                     nx::Object or in a mixin class.

       eval

              obj eval arg ?arg ...?
                     Evaluates a special Tcl script for the scope of obj in the  style  of  Tcl's
                     eval.  There are, however, notable differences to the standard eval: In this
                     script, the colon-prefix notation is available to dispatch to methods and to
                     access  variables of obj. Script-local variables, which are thrown away once
                     the evaluation of  the  script  has  completed,  can  be  defined  to  store
                     intermediate results.

                       % nx::Object create obj {
                         :object property {bar 1}
                         :public object method foo {x} { return $x }
                       }
                       ::obj
                       % ::obj eval {
                         set y [:foo ${:bar}]
                       }
                       1

       filters

              obj object filters submethod ?arg ...?
                     Accesses  and  modifies  the list of methods which are registered as filters
                     with obj using a specific setter or getter submethod:

                     obj object filters add spec ?index?
                            Inserts a single filter into the current  list  of  filters  of  obj.
                            Using index, a position in the existing list of filters for inserting
                            the new filter can be set. If omitted, index  defaults  to  the  list
                            head (0).

                     obj object filters clear
                            Removes all filters from obj and returns the list of removed filters.
                            Clearing is equivalent to passing an empty list for filterSpecList to
                            object filter set.

                     obj object filters delete ?-nocomplain? specPattern
                            Removes a single filter from the current list of filters of obj whose
                            spec matches specPattern. specPattern can  contain  special  matching
                            chars  (see  string match). object filters delete will throw an error
                            if there is no matching filter, unless -nocomplain is set.

                     obj object filters get
                            Returns the list of current filter specifications registered for obj.

                     obj object filters guard methodName ?expr?
                            If expr is specified, registers a guard expression expr with a filter
                            methodName.  This  requires  that  the  filter  methodName  has  been
                            previously set using object filters set or added using object filters
                            add.  expr must be a valid Tcl expression (see expr). An empty string
                            for expr will clear the currently  registered  guard  expression  for
                            filter methodName.

                            If  expr  is  omitted, returns the guard expression set on the filter
                            methodName defined for obj. If none is  available,  an  empty  string
                            will be returned.

                     obj object filters methods ?pattern?
                            If  pattern is omitted, returns all filter names which are defined by
                            obj. By specifying pattern, the returned filters can  be  limited  to
                            those whose names match patterns (see string match).

                     obj object filters set filterSpecList
                            filterSpecList  takes  a  list  of filter specs, with each spec being
                            itself either a one-element or a two-element list: methodName ?-guard
                            guardExpr?.  methodName  identifies  an  existing method of obj which
                            becomes registered as a filter. If having three elements,  the  third
                            element guardExpr will be stored as a guard expression of the filter.
                            This guard expression must be a valid Tcl expression (see expr). expr
                            is  evaluated  when  obj  receives a message to determine whether the
                            filter should intercept the  message.  Guard  expressions  allow  for
                            realizing context-dependent or conditional filter composition.

                     Every  methodName  in a spec must resolve to an existing method in the scope
                     of the object. To access and to manipulate  the  list  of  filters  of  obj,
                     cget|configure -object-filters can also be used.

       forward

              obj ?public | protected | private? object forward ?-debug? ?-deprecated? methodName
              ?-prefix prefixName? ?-frame object? ?-returns  valueChecker?  ?-verbose?  ?target?
              ?arg ...?
                     Define  a  forward  method for the given object. The definition of a forward
                     method registers a predefined, but changeable list  of  forwarder  arguments
                     under  the (forwarder) name methodName. Upon calling the forward method, the
                     forwarder arguments are evaluated  as  a  Tcl  command  call.  That  is,  if
                     present,  target  is  interpreted  as  a Tcl command (e.g., a Tcl proc or an
                     object) and the remainder of the forwarder arguments arg as arguments passed
                     into  this  command.  The  actual  method arguments to the invocation of the
                     forward method itself are appended to the list of forwarder  arguments.   If
                     target  is  omitted,  the  value of methodName is implicitly set and used as
                     target. This way, when providing  a  fully-qualified  Tcl  command  name  as
                     methodName  without  target,  the unqualified methodName (namespace tail) is
                     used as the forwarder name; while the  fully-qualified  one  serves  as  the
                     target.

                     As  for a regular object method, -returns allows for setting a value checker
                     on the values returned by the  resulting  Tcl  command  call.  When  passing
                     object  to  -frame, the resulting Tcl command is evaluated in the context of
                     the object receiving the forward method call. This way, variable names  used
                     in the resulting execution of a command become resolved as object variables.

                     To express deprecation of the forward method methodName, set the -deprecated
                     flag. Deprecated methods remain usable from client  code,  but  their  usage
                     will   be   signaled   to   the   developer  and/or  can  be  tracked  using
                     ::nsf::deprecated. To register methodName with the debugger, set the  -debug
                     flag.   Entering  and  exiting a method, which was flagged for debugging, is
                     recorded by calling the redefinable callback  procs  ::nsf::debug::call  and
                     ::nsf::debug::exit,  respectively.  By  default,  these callbacks forward to
                     ::nsf::log, which can also be customized at the script level.

                     The list of forwarder arguments arg can contain as its  elements  a  mix  of
                     literal  values  and  placeholders. Placeholders are prefixed with a percent
                     symbol (%) and substituted for concrete  values  upon  calling  the  forward
                     method.  These  placeholders allow for constructing and for manipulating the
                     arguments to be passed into the resulting command call on the fly:

                     •      %method becomes substituted for the name of the forward method,  i.e.
                            methodName.

                     •      %self  becomes  substituted  for the name of the object receiving the
                            call of the forward method.

                     •      %1 becomes substituted for the first method argument  passed  to  the
                            call  of  forward  method.  This requires, in turn, that at least one
                            argument is passed along with the method call.

                            Alternatively,  %1  accepts  an  optional  argument   defaults:   {%1
                            defaults}.   defaults  must  be a valid Tcl list of two elements. For
                            the first element, %1 is substituted when there is  no  first  method
                            argument  which can be consumed by %1. The second element is inserted
                            upon availability of  a  first  method  argument  with  the  consumed
                            argument  being  appended  right  after the second list element. This
                            placeholder is typically used  to  define  a  pair  of  getter/setter
                            methods.

                     •      {%@index  value}  becomes  substituted  for  the  specified  value at
                            position index in the  forwarder-arguments  list,  with  index  being
                            either  a  positive integer, a negative integer, or the literal value
                            end (such as in Tcl's  lindex).  Positive  integers  specify  a  list
                            position relative to the list head, negative integers give a position
                            relative to the list tail. Indexes for  positioning  placeholders  in
                            the  definition  of a forward method are evaluated from left to right
                            and should be used in ascending order.

                            Note that value can be a literal or any of  the  placeholders  (e.g.,
                            %method,  %self).  Position prefixes are exempted, they are evaluated
                            as %cmdName-placeholders in this context.

                     •      {%argclindex list} becomes substituted for the  nth  element  of  the
                            provided  list  ,  with  n  corresponding  to  the  number  of method
                            arguments passed to the forward method call.

                     •      %% is substituted for a single, literal percent symbol (%).

                     •      %cmdName is substituted for the value returned from executing the Tcl
                            command cmdName. To pass arguments to cmdName, the placeholder should
                            be wrapped into a Tcl list: {%cmdName ?arg ...?}.

                            Consider using fully-qualified Tcl command names for cmdName to avoid
                            possible name conflicts with the predefined placeholders, e.g., %self
                            vs. %::nx::self.

              To disambiguate the names of  subcommands  or  methods,  which  potentially  become
              called  by  a  forward  method,  a prefix prefixName can be set using -prefix. This
              prefix is prepended automatically to the argument following target (i.e., a  second
              argument),  if  present.  If  missing,  -prefix has no effect on the forward method
              call.

              To inspect and to debug  the  conversions  performed  by  the  above  placeholders,
              setting  the switch -verbose will have the command list to be executed (i.e., after
              substitution) printed using ::nsf::log (debugging level: notice) upon  calling  the
              forward method.

       info

              obj info baseclass
                     Returns the base class of obj. The base class is the class from which all NX
                     objects are instantiated directly or indirectly (typically nx::Object).

              obj info children ?-type className? ?pattern?
                     Retrieves the list of nested (or aggregated) objects of obj.  The  resulting
                     list  contains  the fully qualified names of the nested objects. If -type is
                     set, only nested objects which are direct or  indirect  instances  of  class
                     className are returned. Using pattern, only nested objects whose names match
                     pattern are returned.  The  pattern  string  can  contain  special  matching
                     characters  (see  string  match).  This  method  allows for introspecting on
                     contains.

              obj info class
                     Returns the fully qualified name of the current nx::Class of obj. In case of
                     re-classification (see configure), the returned class will be different from
                     the nx::Class from which obj was originally  instantiated  using  create  or
                     new.

              obj info has ?mixin | namespace | type? ?arg ...?

                     obj info has mixin className
                            Verifies  whether obj has a given nx::Class className registered as a
                            mixin class (returns: true) or not (returns: false).

                     obj info has namespace
                            Checks whether the object has a  companion  Tcl  namespace  (returns:
                            true)  or not (returns: false). The namespace could have been created
                            using, for example, object require namespace.

                     obj info has type className
                            Tests whether the  nx::Class  className  is  a  type  of  the  object
                            (returns:  true)  or not (returns: false). That is, the method checks
                            whether the object is a direct instance of className or  an  indirect
                            instance of one of the superclasses of className.

              obj info lookup submethod ?arg ...?
                     A   collection   of   submethods   to  retrieve  structural  features  (e.g.
                     configuration options, slot objects) and behavioral features (e.g.  methods,
                     filters) available for obj from the perspective of a client to obj. Features
                     provided by obj itself and by the classes in its current linearisation  list
                     are considered.

                     obj info lookup filter name
                            Returns  the  method  handle for the filter method name, if currently
                            registered. If there is no filter name registered, an empty string is
                            returned.

                     obj info lookup filters ?-guards? ?namePattern?
                            Returns the method handles of all filters which are active on obj. By
                            turning on the switch -guards, the corresponding  guard  expressions,
                            if  any,  are  also reported for each filter as a three-element list:
                            methodHandle -guard guardExpr. The returned filters can be limited to
                            those whose names match namePattern (see string match).

                     obj info lookup method name
                            Returns  the method handle for a method name if a so-named method can
                            be invoked on obj. If there is no method name,  an  empty  string  is
                            returned.

                     obj info lookup methods ?namePattern?
                            Returns  the  names of all methods (including aliases and forwarders)
                            which can be invoked on obj. The returned methods can be  limited  to
                            those whose names match namePattern (see string match).

                     obj info lookup mixins ?-guards? ?namePattern?
                            Returns  the  object  names  of all mixin classes which are currently
                            active on obj. By turning on the switch  -guards,  the  corresponding
                            guard  expressions, if any, are also reported as a three-element list
                            for each mixin class: className -guard guardExpr. The returned  mixin
                            classes  can  be  limited to those whose names match namePattern (see
                            string match).

                     obj info lookup parameters methodName ?namePattern?
                            Returns the parameter specification of the method methodName callable
                            on  obj  as  a  list  of parameter names and type specifications. The
                            resulting parameter specification can be limited to those  parameters
                            whose names match namePattern (see string match).

                     obj info lookup slots ?-type className? ?-source all | application | system?
                     ?namePattern?
                            Returns the  command  names  of  all  slot  objects  responsible  for
                            managing  properties,  variables,  and relations of obj. The returned
                            slot objects can be limited according to any or a combination of  the
                            following  criteria:  First,  slot  objects  can be filtered based on
                            their command names matching namePattern (see string match).  Second,
                            -type allows one to select slot objects which are instantiated from a
                            subclass className of nx::Slot (default: nx::Slot) .  Third,  -source
                            restricts  slot  objects  returned  according  to their provenance in
                            either the NX system classes or the application  classes  present  in
                            the linearisation list of obj (default: all).

                            To  extract  details  of  each  slot  object, use the info submethods
                            available for each slot object.

                     obj info lookup syntax methodName ?namePattern?
                            Returns the method parameters of the method  methodName  callable  on
                            obj   as   a   concrete-syntax  description  to  be  used  in  human-
                            understandable messages  (e.g.,  errors  or  warnings,  documentation
                            strings).  The result can be limited to those parameters matching the
                            namePattern (see string match).

                     obj info lookup variables
                            Returns the  command  names  of  all  slot  objects  responsible  for
                            managing  properties  and variables of obj, if provided by obj or the
                            classes in the linearisation list of obj.

                            This  is  equivalent  to  calling:  obj  info  lookup   slots   -type
                            ::nx::VariableSlot -source all ?namePattern?.

                            To  extract  details  of  each  slot  object, use the info submethods
                            available for each slot object.

              obj info name
                     Returns the unqualified name of an object, i.e., the object name without any
                     namespace qualifiers.

              obj info info ?-asList?
                     Returns the available submethods of the info method ensemble for obj, either
                     as a pretty-printed string or as a Tcl list (if the switch -asList  is  set)
                     for further processing.

              obj info object filters ?-guards? ?pattern?
                     If pattern is omitted, returns all filter names which are defined by obj. By
                     turning on the switch -guards, the corresponding guard expressions, if  any,
                     are also reported along with each filter as a three-element list: filterName
                     -guard guardExpr. By specifying pattern, the returned filters can be limited
                     to those whose names match patterns (see string match).

              obj info object method option methodName
                     This  introspection  submethod  provides access to the details of methodName
                     provided by obj. If methodName is not the name of  an  existing  method,  an
                     empty  string is returned. To disambiguate between a non-existing method and
                     an empty string  as  valid  return  value  (e.g.,  for  info  object  method
                     args|parameters|args|...), use info object method exists.

                     Permitted values for option are:

                     •      args  returns a list containing the parameter names of methodName, in
                            order of the method-parameter specification.

                     •      body returns the body script of methodName.

                     •      callprotection returns the call-protection level set for  methodName;
                            possible values: public, protected, private.

                     •      debug returns 1 if methodName is in debug mode, 0 otherwise.

                     •      definition   returns  a  canonical  command  list  which  allows  for
                            (re-)define methodName.

                     •      definitionhandle returns the method  handle  for  a  submethod  in  a
                            method  ensemble  from  the  perspective  of  obj as method provider.
                            methodName must contain a complete method path.

                     •      deprecated returns 1 if methodName is deprecated, 0 otherwise.

                     •      exists returns 1 if there is a methodName provided by obj, returns  0
                            otherwise.

                     •      handle returns the method handle for methodName.

                     •      origin  returns the aliased command if methodName is an alias method,
                            or an empty string otherwise.

                     •      parameters returns the parameter specification  of  methodName  as  a
                            list of parameter names and type specifications.

                     •      registrationhandle  returns  the  method  handle for a submethod in a
                            method ensemble from the perspective of the method caller. methodName
                            must contain a complete method path.

                     •      returns  gives the type specification defined for the return value of
                            methodName.

                     •      submethods returns the names of  all  submethods  of  methodName,  if
                            methodName  is  a  method  ensemble.  Otherwise,  an  empty string is
                            returned.

                     •      syntax returns the method parameters of  methodName  as  a  concrete-
                            syntax description to be used in human-understandable messages (e.g.,
                            errors or warnings, documentation strings).

                     •      type returns whether  methodName  is  a  scripted  method,  an  alias
                            method, a forwarder method, or a setter method.

              obj   info  object  methods  ?-callprotection  level?  ?-type  methodType?  ?-path?
              ?namePattern?
                     Returns the names of all methods defined by  obj.  Methods  covered  include
                     those  defined  using  object alias and object forward. The returned methods
                     can be limited to those whose names match namePattern (see string match).

                     By setting -callprotection, only methods of a certain call protection  level
                     (public, protected, or private) will be returned. Methods of a specific type
                     can be requested using -type. The recognized values for methodType are:

                     •      scripted denotes methods defined using object method;

                     •      alias denotes alias methods defined using object alias;

                     •      forwarder denotes forwarder methods defined using object forward;

                     •      setter denotes methods defined using ::nsf::setter;

                     •      all returns methods of  any  type,  without  restrictions  (also  the
                            default value);

              obj info object mixins ?-guards? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is omitted, returns the object names of the mixin classes which
                     extend obj directly. By turning on the  switch  -guards,  the  corresponding
                     guard  expressions,  if  any,  are  also reported along with each mixin as a
                     three-element list: className -guard guardExpr. The returned  mixin  classes
                     can be limited to those whose names match patterns (see string match).

              obj info object slots ?-type className? ?pattern?
                     If  pattern  is  not specified, returns the object names of all slot objects
                     defined by obj. The returned slot objects can be limited according to any or
                     a combination of the following criteria: First, slot objects can be filtered
                     based on their command names matching pattern (see  string  match).  Second,
                     -type  allows  one  to  select  slot  objects  which are instantiated from a
                     subclass className of nx::Slot (default: nx::Slot).

              obj info object variables ?pattern?
                     If pattern is omitted, returns the object names of all slot objects provided
                     by  obj  which are responsible for managing properties and variables of obj.
                     Otherwise, only slot objects whose names match pattern are returned.

                     This   is   equivalent   to   calling:   obj   info   object   slots   -type
                     ::nx::VariableSlot pattern.

                     To  extract  details  of each slot object, use the info submethods available
                     for each slot object.

              obj info parent
                     Returns the fully qualified name of the parent object of  obj,  if  any.  If
                     there  is  no  parent  object,  the name of the Tcl namespace containing obj
                     (e.g. "::") will be reported.

              obj info precedence ?-intrinsic? ?pattern?
                     Lists the classes from which obj inherits structural (e.g.  properties)  and
                     behavioral   features   (e.g.   methods)   and  methods,  in  order  of  the
                     linearisation scheme in NX. By setting the switch -intrinsic,  only  classes
                     which  participate  in  superclass/subclass  relationships  (i.e., intrinsic
                     classes) are returned. If a pattern is provided  only  classes  whose  names
                     match  pattern are returned. The pattern string can contain special matching
                     characters (see string match).

              obj info variable option handle
                     Retrieves selected details about a variable represented by the given handle.
                     A  handle  can  be  obtained by querying obj using info object variables and
                     info lookup variables.  Valid values for option are:

                     •      name returns the variable name.

                     •      parameter returns a canonical  parameter  specification  eligible  to
                            (re-)define  the given variable (e.g. using object variable) in a new
                            context.

                     •      definition returns  a  canonical  representation  of  the  definition
                            command used to create the variable in its current configuration.

              obj info vars ?pattern?
                     Yields  a  list  of  Tcl variable names created and defined for the scope of
                     obj, i.e., object variables. The list can be  limited  to  object  variables
                     whose  names  match pattern. The pattern string can contain special matching
                     characters (see string match).

       method

              obj ?public | protected  |  private?  object  method  ?-debug?  ?-deprecated?  name
              parameters ?-checkalways? ?-returns valueChecker? body
                     Defines a scripted method methodName for the scope of the object. The method
                     becomes part of the object's signature interface. Besides a methodName,  the
                     method definition specifies the method parameters and a method body.

                     parameters  accepts  a  Tcl  list  containing  an  arbitrary  number of non-
                     positional and positional parameter definitions. Each  parameter  definition
                     comprises   a  parameter  name,  a  parameter-specific  value  checker,  and
                     parameter options.

                     The body contains the method implementation as a script block. In this  body
                     script,  the colon-prefix notation is available to denote an object variable
                     and a self call. In addition, the context of the object receiving the method
                     call (i.e., the message) can be accessed (e.g., using nx::self) and the call
                     stack can be introspected (e.g., using nx::current).

                     Optionally, -returns allows for setting a value checker on  values  returned
                     by  the  method  implementation.  By  setting the switch -checkalways, value
                     checking on arguments and return value is guaranteed to be  performed,  even
                     if value checking is temporarily disabled; see nx::configure).

                     To  express  deprecation  of  the  method  name,  set  the -deprecated flag.
                     Deprecated methods remain usable from client code, but their usage  will  be
                     signaled  to the developer and/or can be tracked using ::nsf::deprecated. To
                     register name with the debugger, set the -debug flag. Entering and exiting a
                     method,  which  was  flagged  for  debugging,  is  recorded  by  calling the
                     redefinable  callback  procs  ::nsf::debug::call   and   ::nsf::debug::exit,
                     respectively.  By  default, these callbacks forward to ::nsf::log, which can
                     also be customized at the script level.

                     A method closely resembles a Tcl proc, but  it  differs  in  some  important
                     aspects:  First,  a  method  can  define non-positional parameters and value
                     checkers on arguments. Second, the script implementing the method  body  can
                     contain  object-specific  notation  and  commands (see above). Third, method
                     calls cannot be intercepted using Tcl trace. Note that an existing Tcl  proc
                     can be registered as an alias method with the object (see object alias).

       move

              obj move newObjectName
                     Effectively renames an object. First, the source object obj is cloned into a
                     target object newObjectName using copy. Second, the  source  object  obj  is
                     destroyed  by  invoking destroy.  move is also called internally when rename
                     is performed for a Tcl command representing an object.

       mixins

              obj object mixins submethod ?arg ...?
                     Accesses and modifies the list of mixin classes  of  obj  using  a  specific
                     setter or getter submethod:

                     obj object mixins add spec ?index?
                            Inserts  a  single mixin class into the current list of mixin classes
                            of obj. Using index, a position in the existing list of mixin classes
                            for  inserting  the  new  mixin  class  can be set. If omitted, index
                            defaults to the list head (0).

                     obj object mixins classes ?pattern?
                            If pattern is omitted, returns the object names of the mixin  classes
                            which  extend obj directly. By specifying pattern, the returned mixin
                            classes can be limited to those whose names match pattern (see string
                            match).

                     obj object mixins clear
                            Removes  all  mixin  classes from obj and returns the list of removed
                            mixin classes. Clearing is equivalent to passing an  empty  list  for
                            mixinSpecList to object mixins set.

                     obj object mixins delete ?-nocomplain? specPattern
                            Removes  a  mixin  class  from a current list of mixin classes of obj
                            whose spec  matches  specPattern.  specPattern  can  contain  special
                            matching chars (see string match). object mixins delete will throw an
                            error if there is no matching mixin class, unless -nocomplain is set.

                     obj object mixins get
                            Returns the list of current mixin specifications.

                     obj object mixins guard className ?expr?
                            If expr is specified, a guard expression expr is registered with  the
                            mixin  class  className.  This  requires that the corresponding mixin
                            class className has been previously set using object  mixins  set  or
                            added  using  object  mixins add. expr must be a valid Tcl expression
                            (see expr). An  empty  string  for  expr  will  clear  the  currently
                            registered guard expression for the mixin class className.

                            If  expr  is  not  specified, returns the active guard expression. If
                            none is available, an empty string will be returned.

                     obj object mixins set mixinSpecList
                            mixinSpecList represents a list of mixin class specs, with each  spec
                            being  itself either a one-element or a three-element list: className
                            ?-guard guardExpr?. If  having  one  element,  the  element  will  be
                            considered  the  className  of  the  mixin  class.  If  having  three
                            elements, the third element guardExpr  will  be  stored  as  a  guard
                            expression  of  the  mixin  class.  This  guard  expression  will  be
                            evaluated using expr when obj receives a message to determine if  the
                            mixin  is  to  be  considered  during  method  dispatch or not. Guard
                            expressions allow  for  realizing  context-dependent  or  conditional
                            mixin composition.

                     At  the  time of setting the mixin relation, that is, calling object mixins,
                     every className as part of a spec must be an existing instance of nx::Class.
                     To access and to manipulate the list of mixin classes of obj, cget|configure
                     -object-mixins can also be used.

       __object_configureparameter

              obj __object_configureparameter
                     Computes and returns the configuration options  available  for  obj,  to  be
                     consumed as method-parameter specification by configure.

       property

              obj  object  property  ?-accessor  public | protected | private? ?-class className?
              ?-configurable trueFalse? ?-incremental? ?-nocomplain? ?-trace set | get | default?
              spec ?initBlock?
                     Defines  a  property  for  the  scope  of  the object. The spec provides the
                     property specification as a list holding at least one element  or,  maximum,
                     two  elements:  propertyName?:typeSpec?  ?defaultValue?. The propertyName is
                     also used as to form the names of the getter/setter  methods,  if  requested
                     (see  -accessor).  It  is,  optionally, equipped with a typeSpec following a
                     colon delimiter which specifies a value checker for the values which  become
                     assigned  to  the property. The second, optional element sets a defaultValue
                     for this property.

                     If -accessor is set, a property will provide for a pair of getter and setter
                     methods:

                     obj propertyName set value
                            Sets the property propertyName to value.

                     obj propertyName get
                            Returns the current value of property propertyName.

                     obj propertyName unset
                            Removes  the  value store of propertyName (e.g., an object variable),
                            if existing.

                     The option value passed along -accessor sets the level  of  call  protection
                     for  the generated getter and setter methods: public, protected, or private.
                     By default, no getter and setter methods are created.

                     Turning on the switch -incremental provides a refined  setter  interface  to
                     the  value  managed  by  the  property.  First, setting -incremental implies
                     requesting  -accessor  (set  to  public  by  default,   if   not   specified
                     explicitly).  Second, the managed value will be considered a valid Tcl list.
                     A multiplicity of 1..* is set by default, if  not  specified  explicitly  as
                     part of spec. Third, to manage this list value element-wise (incrementally),
                     two additional setter methods become available:

                     obj propertyName add element ?index?
                            Adding element to the managed list value, at the list position  given
                            by index (by default: 0).

                     obj propertyName delete elementPattern
                            Removing  one  or multiple elements from the managed list value which
                            match elementPattern. elementPattern can contain matching  characters
                            (see string match).

              By  setting  -configurable  to true (the default), the property can be accessed and
              modified through cget and  configure,  respectively.  If  false,  no  configuration
              option will become available via cget and configure.

              If  neither  -accessor  nor  -configurable  are requested, the value managed by the
              property will have to be accessed and modified directly. If the property manages an
              object variable, its value will be readable and writable using set and eval.

              The  -trace option causes certain slot methods to be executed whenever get, set, or
              default operations are invoked on the property:

                     •      set: slot value=set obj propertyName valueget: slot value=get obj propertyNamedefault: slot value=default obj propertyName

              A property becomes implemented  by  a  slot  object  under  any  of  the  following
              conditions:

                     •      -configurable equals true (by default).

                     •      -accessor is one of public, protected, or private.

                     •      -incremental is turned on.

                     •      initBlock is a non-empty string.

                     Assuming default settings, every property is realized by a slot object.

                     Provided  a  slot  object  managing  the property is to be created, a custom
                     class className from which this slot object is to be instantiated can be set
                     using -class. The default value is ::nx::VariableSlot.

                     The  last  argument initBlock accepts an optional Tcl script which is passed
                     into the initialization procedure (see configure)  of  the  property's  slot
                     object. See also initBlock for create and new.

                     By  default,  the property will ascertain that no (potentially) pre-existing
                     and equally named object variable will  be  overwritten  when  defining  the
                     property. In case of a conflict, an error exception is thrown:

                     % Object create obj { set :x 1 }
                     ::obj
                     % ::obj object property {x 2}
                     object ::obj has already an instance variable named 'x'

                     If the switch -nocomplain is on, this check is omitted (continuing the above
                     example):

                     % ::obj object property -nocomplain {x 2}
                     % ::obj eval {set :x}
                     2

       require

              obj require namespace
                     Create a Tcl namespace named after the  object  obj.  All  object  variables
                     become available as namespace variables.

              obj require ?public | protected | private? object method methodName
                     Attempts   to   register   a   method   definition   made   available  using
                     ::nsf::method::provide under the name methodName with obj .  The  registered
                     method  is  subjected  to  default  call  protection (protected), if not set
                     explicitly.

       unknown

              obj unknown unknownMethodName ?arg ...?
                     This method is called implicitly whenever  an  unknown  method  is  invoked.
                     unknownMethodName  indicates  the  unresolvable method name, followed by the
                     remainder of the original  argument  vector  as  a  number  of  arg  of  the
                     indirected method invocation.

       variable

              obj object variable ?-accessor public | protected | private? ?-incremental? ?-class
              className? ?-configurable trueFalse?  ?-initblock  script?  ?-trace  set  |  get  |
              default? ?-nocomplain? spec ?defaultValue?
                     Defines  a  variable  for  the  scope  of  the object. The spec provides the
                     variable specification: variableName?:typeSpec?. The  variableName  will  be
                     used  to  name the underlying Tcl variable and the getter/setter methods, if
                     requested (see -accessor).  spec is  optionally  equipped  with  a  typeSpec
                     following  a  colon delimiter which specifies a value checker for the values
                     managed by the variable. Optionally, a defaultValue can be defined.

                     If -accessor is set explicitly, a variable will provide for a pair of getter
                     and setter methods:

                     obj variableName set varValue
                            Sets variableName to varValue.

                     obj variableName get
                            Returns the current value of variableName.

                     obj variableName unset
                            Removes variableName, if existing, underlying the property.

                     The  option  value  passed along -accessor sets the level of call protection
                     for the getter  and  setter  methods:  public,  protected,  or  private.  By
                     default, no getter and setter methods are created.

                     Turning  on  the  switch -incremental provides a refined setter interface to
                     the value managed by  the  variable.  First,  setting  -incremental  implies
                     requesting  -accessor  (public  by  default,  if  not specified explicitly).
                     Second,  the  managed  value  will  be  considered  a  valid  Tcl  list.   A
                     multiplicity  of 1..* is set by default, if not specified explicitly as part
                     of  spec  (see  above).  Third,  to  manage  this  list  value  element-wise
                     (incrementally), two additional setter operations become available:

                     obj variableName add element ?index?
                            Adding  element to the managed list value, at the list position given
                            by index (by default: 0).

                     obj variableName delete elementPattern
                            Removing one or multiple elements from the managed list  value  which
                            match  elementPattern. elementPattern can contain matching characters
                            (see string match).

              By setting -configurable to true, the variable can be  accessed  and  modified  via
              cget  and  configure,  respectively. If false (the default), the interface based on
              cget and configure will not become available.  In  this  case,  and  provided  that
              -accessor  is  set, the variable can be accessed and modified via the getter/setter
              methods. Alternatively, the underlying Tcl variable, which is  represented  by  the
              variable,  can  always  be  accessed  and  modified  directly, e.g., using eval. By
              default, -configurable is false.

              The -trace option causes certain slot methods to be executed whenever get, set,  or
              default operations are invoked on the variable:

                     •      set: slot value=set obj variableName valueget: slot value=get obj variableNamedefault: slot value=default obj variableName

              A  variable  becomes  implemented  by  a  slot  object  under  any of the following
              conditions:

                     •      -configurable equals true.

                     •      -accessor is one of public, protected, or private.

                     •      -incremental is turned on.

                     •      -initblock is a non-empty string.

                     Provided a slot object managing the variable is  to  be  created,  a  custom
                     class className from which this slot object is to be instantiated can be set
                     using -class. The default value is ::nx::VariableSlot.

                     Using -initblock, an optional Tcl script can be defined which becomes passed
                     into  the  initialization  procedure  (see configure) of the variable's slot
                     object. See also initBlock for create and new.

                     By default, the variable will ascertain  that  a  pre-existing  and  equally
                     named object variable will not be overwritten when defining the variable. In
                     case of a conflict, an error exception is thrown:

                     % Object create obj { set :x 1 }
                     ::obj
                     % ::obj object variable x 2
                     object ::obj has already an instance variable named 'x'

                     If the switch -nocomplain is on, this check is omitted (continuing the above
                     example):

                     % ::obj object variable -nocomplain x 2
                     % ::obj eval {set :x}
                     2

OBJECT SELF-REFERENCE

       Objects are naturally recursive, with methods of an object ::obj frequently invoking other
       methods in the same object ::obj and accessing  ::obj's  object  variables.  To  represent
       these self-references effectively in method bodies, and dependening on the usage scenario,
       NX offers two alternative notations for self-references: one based  on  a  special-purpose
       syntax token ("colon prefix"), the other based on the command nx::current.

       Both,  the  colon-prefix  notation  and nx::current, may be used only in method bodies and
       scripts passed to eval. If they appear anywhere else, an error will  be  reported.   There
       are three main use cases for self-references:

       [1]    As  a  placeholder  for  the  currently  active  object, nx::current can be used to
              retrieve the object name.

       [2]    Reading and writing object variables directly (i.e. without  getter/setter  methods
              in  place)  require  the use of variable names carrying the prefix : ("colon-prefix
              notation"). Internally, colon-prefixed variable names  are  processed  using  Tcl's
              variable  resolvers.  Alternatively,  one can provide for getter/setter methods for
              object variables (see property and variable).

       [3]    Self-referential method calls can be defined via prefixing (:) the method names or,
              alternatively,   via  nx::current.  Internally,  colon-prefixed  method  names  are
              processed using Tcl's command resolvers. The colon-prefix notation is  recommended,
              also  because  it  has  a  (slight)  performance  advantage  over nx::current which
              requires two rather than one command evaluation per method call.

       See the following listing for some examples corresponding to use cases 1--3:

                Object create ::obj {
                  # 1) print name of currently active object ('::obj')
                  puts [current];
                  # 2) object variables
                  set :x 1; :object variable y 2;
                  :public object method print {} {
                    # 2.a) method-local variable
                    set z 3;
                    # 2.b) variable substitution using '$' and ':'
                    puts ${:x}-${:y}-$z;
                    # 2.c) reading variables using 'set'
                    puts [set :x]-[set :y]-[set z];
                    # 2.d) writing variables using 'set', 'incr', ...
                    set :x 1; incr :y;
                  }
                  :public object method show {} {
                    # 3.a) self-referential method call using ':'
                    :print;
                    # 3.b) self-referential method call using 'nx::current'
                    [current] print;
                    # 3.c) self-referential method call using 'nx::current object'
                    [current object] print;
                  }
                  :show
                }

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2014-16 Stefan Sobernig <stefan.sobernig@wu.ac.at>, Gustaf Neumann <gustaf.neumann@wu.ac.at>; available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Austria license (CC BY 3.0 AT).